hammer away / ˈhæm ər /

锤击落锤榔头锤子

hammer away3 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a tool consisting of a solid head, usually of metal, set crosswise on a handle, used for beating metals, driving nails, etc.
  2. any of various instruments or devices resembling this in form, action, or use, as a gavel, a mallet for playing the xylophone, or a lever that strikes the bell in a doorbell.
  3. Firearms. the part of a lock that by its fall or action causes the discharge, as by exploding the percussion cap or striking the primer or firing pin; the cock.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to beat or drive with a hammer.
  2. to fasten by using hammer and nails; nail: We spent the day hammering up announcements on fences and trees.
  3. to assemble or build with a hammer and nails: He hammered together a small crate.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to strike blows with or as if with a hammer.
  2. to make persistent or laborious attempts to finish or perfect something: He hammered away at his speech for days.
  3. to reiterate; emphasize by repetition: The teacher hammered away at the multiplication tables.

hammer away 近义词

v. 动词 verb

work hard at

hammer away构成的短语

  • hammer and tongs
  • hammer away at
  • hammer out
  • under the hammer

更多hammer away例句

  1. A pick hammer sits at the top of the handle to allow users to break ice with a tapping motion, while the spike at the bottom offers more traditional stabbing functionality.
  2. Complete your set with a cutting mat, metal rulers and squares, some sponges, and a rubber or wooden hammer—any other type of hammer can damage the leather.
  3. The group, often armed with guns and other weapons such as hammers and baseball bats, regularly rallies on the grounds of the Minnesota Capitol.
  4. There were rules and if someone was acting up in the chat you dropped the hammer.
  5. Papagelis joined forces in Hammer’s Lot with Ken Johnson — “Pinto Ron” — in 1992.
  6. Next, the GOP should hammer away at how our roads, bridges, and tunnels are crumbling, and push for an infrastructure initiative.
  7. If we enter with hammer in hand, we may leave with merely dust and rubble on our faces.
  8. In this way, certain cognitive mechanisms can act like a hammer too eager for nails.
  9. The phrase means, “the nail that sticks out always gets hit by a hammer.”
  10. Another surveillance video, showing the perpetrator with hammer in hand, is here.
  11. The noise of the hammer is always in his ears, and his eye is upon the pattern of the vessel he maketh.
  12. With a hammer the boy knocked off some of the slats of the small box in which Squinty had made his journey.
  13. I suppose the hammer falls back more slowly from the string, and that makes the tone sing longer.
  14. He was ready to drop when he reached it, and his heart beat like a hammer against his ribs.
  15. And then the Monitor's deafening hammer sounded again, and after that, silence.